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| <nettime> ICANN watch: RealNames goes bust, MS, Verisign |
[<http://icannwatch.org/article.php?sid=732&mode=thread&order=0>,
including some comments; via [tbyfield@panix.com>]
Alternate Roots
RealNames plays Unreal
Posted by tbyfield on Saturday, May 11 @ 18:22:56 MDT
Contributed by tbyfield
According to Newsbytes,[1] RealNames, the first major contender to
provide an "alternative" to DNS, is set to shut its doors within a
matter of weeks. *[Updated Sun May 12 09:45:09 EDT 2002]*
The report states that the proximate cause is the decision by
Microsoft not to renew its contract, which expired in March, with
RealNames.
[1] http://www.newsbytes.com/news/02/176525.html
While it's sad to see another "innovator" go down the tubes, it's
worth noting that RealNames's odyssey was (imo) not one of the better
trends in the history of the politics of naming. Let's revisit a bit
of that history.
RealNames's approach was, in essence, to interpret the domain name
system itself as damage and route around it. Unlike later companies
working in this nebulous terrain, such as New.net (which was born in
part in response to ICANN's whimso-tyrannical approach to new TLDs),
RealNames's interest seemingly had *nothing* to do with any issues of
equity, freedom of speech, or expansion of the properly so-called
namespace. Instead, it sought to provide a service that would extend
into the "space" of the URL the payola-like logic of paid-for search
engine rankings, which were then beginning to seriously distort the
main "navigational" alternatives to DNS. The basic idea was fairly
simple: use the URL field of a browser to intercept user input and
substitute "real" names -- bought from RealNames -- to guide them into
a completely privatized namespace.
Not surprisingly, RealNames's first big customer in May 1998 was the
search engine Altavista, which at that point was going downhill fast,
propelled by the weight of all manner of encumbrances. The rub?
According to NTK,[2] RealNames was paying Altavista, not vice versa.
[2] http://www.ntk.net/index.cgi?b=01998-05-22&l=86
Less surprising in a way, but more alarming in others, was RealNames's
next big client, Microsoft, whose tendency to detourn open standards
has been widely noted. The two companies closed a contract in March
2000, and RealNames "keywords" became yet another mechanism by which
MS tried to wean "its" users away from the internet. Hence, for
example, the rather remarkable double-plus-doublespeak of a 7 June 200
RealNames press release issued in defense of MS:
According to Keith Teare, founder and CEO of RealNames Corporation,
"Has anybody considered what this [the US Government's decision to
prosecute Microsoft and the court's decision to break up the
company] means for Microsoft's partners and the future of
technology? RealNames is a start-up with technologies that improve
the Internet experience for consumers through a natural language
navigation system, using Internet Keywords *instead of lengthy web
addresses.* Microsoft embraced our open standards-based architecture
in March 2000 because it makes perfect sense for consumers to use
Internet Keywords *within MSN and Internet Explorer.* [Emphasis
added.]
That was then. Now that this happy symbiosis has come to an end,
RealNames's founder, CEO, *and* Board Chair, Keith Teare is taking a
much less benign view of Microsoft's relationship to language. The
disgruntled former employee puts it quite bluntly on his personal
website:[3] "*I am sure that Microsoft will do an excellent job of
misinforming the public about the reasons for this decision and so I
want to put the record straight*" (emphasis added). But Microsoft isn't
"misinforming" people, Mr. Teare -- they're merely *redirecting* them.
[3] http://www.teare.com/default.htm
In the same statement, Teare nods to the fact that VeriSign (a
RealNames investor, it seems) "had just [as of 6 December 2001[4]?]
committed to a plan to give every com, net and org customer 5 free
promotional Keywords for 30 days." *Say what?* Verisign, the
Ueber-registry, was planning to subvert transparent user-to-resource
connection *at the level of the URL field in browsers?* Indeed. As
Verisign explains it:
[4] http://www.realnames.com/body/pressreleases/pr_120601.asp
A perfect complement to domain names, [RealNames'] Keywords are Web
addresses consisting of natural language names (e.g., "The New York
Times") that work automatically *in the Microsoft Internet Explorer
browser* without entering prefixes ("www") or extensions (".com"),
redirecting the user to a predetermined Web site or a specific page
within that Web site. [Emphasis added.]
Of course, prepending the hostname "www." and appending the TLD ".com"
to whatever someone types into a URL field is now a standard feature
that many people have come to rely on. Naturally, then, it makes
perfect sense for Verisign to align itself with Microsoft by
*substituting* something else for what someone types and "*redirecting*
the user to a predetermined" -- that is, non-DNS-based -- "Web site."
That, in itself, is dubious enough, but this broadening of scope has
potentially serious consequences, as Verisign happily acknowledges.
Its premium (i.e., expensive) RealNames-based offering, "Keyword
Review," "help[s] deter cyber-squatting" -- of words that are ***not***
domain names. What John Gilmore rightly denounced[5] as the "congenital
confusion between trademarks and domain names" was bad enough; but, as
many critics of this confusion have been predicting for years (this
one included[6]), we now see "cybersquatting" applied to language other
than domain names merely because its context -- a browser's URL field
-- is the same. (For a reductio ad absurdum of this, see
Futurefeedforward's increasingly probable spoof[7] of a new Microsoft
Word feature circa 2011.)
[5] http://www.icann.org/comments-mail/comment-ip/msg00025.html
[6] http://www.firstmonday.dk/issues/issue4_3/byfield/index.html
[7] http://amsterdam.nettime.org/Lists-Archives/nettime-l-0203/msg00164.html
Under the circumstances, it's hard to shed tears over Microsoft's
shedding of Teare and RealNames. Unfortunately, as one of the MS
employees said (according to scribe's notes Teare has published[8]) in
the 7 May meeting where MS broke the bad news to RealNames, "we need
to separate the people from the IP--IP is the asset, people are free
agents." In other words, RealNames may be going away, but this
redirection/substitution technique surely won't. Now that MS has
pulled the plug on RN, it's interesting to speculate what MS -- and
Versign -- might have up their respective sleeves. Aside from ".net",
of course.
[8] http://www.teare.com/scribe.htm
One ICANN Watch contributor puts it thusly:
According to this Newsbyte article, Realnames, a company that sold
keyword names which worked in the IE browser is closing up shop due
to Microsofts' decision not to renew their exclusive contract with
Realnames. Yet another reason not to make your business reliant on
M$.
[...comment section...]
<...>
Re: RealNames plays Unreal (Score: 1)
by fnord (d_d@email.com) on Saturday, May 11 @ 20:15:38 MDT
(User Info)
F---edcompany.com carried this[9] a week ago:
[9] http://comments.fuckedcompany.com/phpcomments/index.php?newsid=86419&sid=1&page=1&parentid=0&crapfilter=1
Fake
RealNames
Rumor has it RealNames' contract with Microsoft, the only way its
crappy keywords work, expires today. Oh and... and their $30
million debt with microsoft comes due today too... Looks like
bankruptcy in the midst.....
When: May 03 2002 12:00AM
Company: RealNames
I didn't report on it at the time as it was near impossible to figure
out which of many contracts with Micro$oft might have been expiring,
or which loan might have been due, Micro$oft had invested $70m at one
point. Fsckedco has been known to be wrong before, or at least
premature (about new.net for example[10]).
[10] http://icannwatch.org/article.php?sid=732&mode=thread&order=0
Veri$ign also had a 10% stake in RealNames, with an option to go to
20% which they never exercised. The interesting thing to watch now is
what becomes of the assets? It is already integrated in Micro$oft's
Internet Explorer web browser, it might well cost more to take it out
than leave it in. Veri$ign's IDN[11] (internationalized domain name)
service also used RealNames technology. One can imagine either or both
of these behemoths picking over the remains. While the company may be
dead I suspect the technology will live on, and perhaps even grow.
[11] http://corporate.verisign.com/news/2001/pr_20010620.html
As to why they failed, in addition to the reasons given, I mean, come
on, 80 employees (and that after prior layoffs)? One could get away
with that before the dotcom crash but that was long ago. The only
surprise is that they've lasted till now. And like many once rising
dotcom stars who crashed and burned, they also failed in their
execution. I registered a RealName when they first came out. They
pre-screened each name and wouldn't allow actual words, eg: auction,
because then a single site would have a monopoly on that term. A year
later I got a renewal notice that was so poorly written I couldn't
figure out what I was required to do. I then got another notice saying
I should disregard the previous one, with no further explanation. That
was the end of my use of RealNames, nor have I since used them in a
browser to go anywhere. They also got into hot water for reversing
their stand on words and selling KeyWord 'books' to Amazon.com for a
pile of money. There was a hue and cry about that and I don't now
recall whether they backed down. They just never seemed to get their
act together.
They really had a golden opportunity, particularily with IDN (as true
IDN in the DNS is years away, if ever), but they fumbled the ball, and
this despite the backing and leverage of two near monopolies in
crucial areas. If either/both of them assume more direct control of
the technology, it may be too soon to count it out entirely. -g
<...>
Re: RealNames plays Unreal (Score: 1)
by fnord (d_d@email.com) on Sunday, May 12 @ 08:19:09 MDT
(User Info)
Keith Teare, founder and former head of RealNames, speaks[12] out on the
plug being pulled. Some interesting bits:
[12] http://www.teare.com/default.htm
VeriSign had just committed to a plan to give every com, net and
org customer 5 free promotional Keywords for 30 days. This would
have resulted in widespread awareness and great revenue boost.
I don't see this as a panacea. That would have required that most of
them would be very obscure keywords, hence little traffic. And even
less revenue.
We [MicroSoft] do not believe in "Naming", we believe in search.
This is because we control search 100% whereas we could never
control naming. Some of us believe search results are a better
experience than navigation through naming. Sure the URL and the DNS
are broken, but to fix it is a big job with no clear reward for
Microsoft.
I fail to see how Microsoft controls search 100%, even using Internet
Explorer and MSN search (as is now displayed when one types a
non-existent domain name using IE's URL line). While Microsoft has
some control over search rankings, and could assume more by either
screening each submission like Yahoo, or going to a pay for placement
model like overture.com, it still wouldn't be 100%. Those not liking
the results would use another search engine, and both screening and
pay for placement results fall far short of using relevance algorithms
as Google does. AOL recently replaced its use of Overture for
searching with Google, for example. I can't see even Microsoft trying
a stunt where IE wouldn't resolve google.com or yahoo.com.
The only naming technology in the world capable of allowing
non-ASCII characters to be used as web addresses is being killed at
birth - before it succeeds and becomes "out of control".
At birth (1998) is a bit of a stretch even without internet time. It
also isn't the only non-ASCII naming technology, walid.com is one of
the others.
Now, Bill Bliss - who runs MSN Search and was until recently in
charge of the RealNames relationship, has in the last few weeks
been moved to "Natural Language Platforms" and is charged with
developing a variant of our system. The browser is now back under
Microsoft's control and it is possible that - having learned much
from RealNames - it will develop its own version of our resolution
service.
Which is what I said here earlier. This may not allow MicroSoft 100%
control, but it gives them more control. IE is the default browser for
a majority (putatively 88%) of the world's users. The percentage in
non-primarily English speaking countries is probably at least that
high. Functional, though faux, IDN resolution would give MicroSoft yet
another near monopoly. In practical terms, that's close enough. Indeed
it is probably better than having a 100% monopoly as it slows down the
regulators.
What is shared cannot be controlled.
Microsoft, and ICANN, understand that one very well. And MicroSoft has
been at it far longer and now has a massive head start on IDN
resolution. Be afraid... -g
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